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"I know," said Dennis sympathetically.
The Tennessee Shad now returned from the wars, covered with mud and the more visible marks of the combat.
"h.e.l.lo," he said gruffly.
"h.e.l.lo," said Stover.
The Tennessee Shad went wearily to his corner and stripped for the bath.
"Well, say it," said Stover, who, in his agitation, had actually picked up a textbook and started to study. "Jump on me, why don't you?"
"I'm not going to jump on you," said the Tennessee Shad, who weakly pulled off the heavy shoes. "Only--well, you couldn't see it as the umpire did, could you?"
"No!"
"What a day--what an awful day!"
Dennis de Brian de Boru Finnegan, with great tact, rose and hesitated:
"I'm going--I--I've got to get ready for supper," he said desperately.
Then he went lamely over to Stover and held out his hand: "I know how you feel old man, but--but--I'm glad you did it!"
Whereupon he disappeared in blus.h.i.+ng precipitation.
Stover breathed hard and tried to bring his mind to the printed lesson. The Tennessee Shad, sighing audibly, continued his ablutions, dressed and sat down.
"d.i.n.k."
"What?"
"Why did you do it?"
Then Stover, flinging down his book with an access of rage, cried out:
"Why? Because you all, every d.a.m.n one of you, expected me to _lie_!"
The next day Stover, who had firmly made up his mind to a sort of modified ostracism, was amazed to find that over night he had become a hero. By the next morning the pa.s.sion and the bitterness of the struggle having died away, the house looked at the matter in a calmer mood and one by one came to him and gripped his hand with halting, blurted words of apology or explanation.
Utterly unprepared for this development, Stover all at once realized that he had won what neither courage nor wit had been able to bring him, the something he had always longed for without being quite able to name it--the respect of his fellows. He felt it in the looks that followed him as he went over to chapel, in the nodded recognition of Fifth Formers, who had never before noticed him, in The Roman himself, who flunked him without satire or aggravation. And not yet knowing himself, his impulses or the strange things that lay dormant beneath the surface of his everyday life, Stover was a little ashamed, as though he did not deserve it all.
That afternoon as d.i.n.k was donning his football togs, preparing for practice, a knock came at the door which opened on a very much embarra.s.sed delegation from the Woodhull--the Coffee-colored Angel, Cheyenne Baxter and Tough McCarty.
"I say, is that you, d.i.n.k?" said the Coffee-colored Angel.
"It is," said Stover, with as much dignity as the state of his wardrobe would permit.
"I say, we've come over from the Woodhull, you know," continued the Coffee-colored Angel, who stopped after this bit of illuminating news.
"Well, what do you want?"
"I say, that's not just it; we're sent by the Woodhull I meant to say, and we want to say, we want you to know--how white we think it was of you!"
"Old man," said Cheyenne Baxter, "we want to thank you. What we want to tell you is how white we think it was of you."
"You needn't thank me," said Stover gruffly, pulling his leg through the football trousers. "I didn't want to do it."
The delegation stood confused, wondering how to end the painful scene.
"It was awful white!" said the Coffee-colored Angel, tying knots in his sweater.
"It certainly was," said Cheyenne.
As this brought them no further along the Coffee-colored Angel exclaimed in alarm:
"I say, d.i.n.k, will you shake hands?"
Stover gravely extended his right.
Cheyenne next clung to it, blurting out:
"Say, d.i.n.k, I wish I could make you understand--just--just how white we think it was!"
The two rushed away leaving Tough McCarty to have his say. Both stood awkwardly, frightened before the possibility of a display of sentiment.
"Look here," said Tough firmly, and then stopped, drew a long breath and continued: "Say, you and I have sort of formed up a sort of vendetta and all that sort of thing, haven't we?"
"We have."
"Now, I'm not going to call that off. I don't suppose you'd want it, either."
"No, I wouldn't!"
"We've got to have a good, old, slam-bang fight sooner or later and then, perhaps, it'll be different. I'm not coming around asking you to be friends, or anything like that sort of rot, you know, but what I want you to know is this--is this--what I want you to understand is just how darned _white_ that was of you!"
"All right," said Stover frigidly, because he was tremendously moved and in terror of showing it.
"That's not what I wanted to say," said Tough, frowning terrifically and kicking the floor. "I mean--I say, you know what I mean, don't you?"
"All right," said Stover gruffly.
"And I say," said Tough, remembering only one line of all he had come prepared to say, "if you'll let me, Stover, I should consider it an honor to shake your hand."
d.i.n.k gave his hand, trembling a little.
"Of course you understand," said Tough who thought he comprehended Stover's silence, "of course we fight it out some day."
"All right," said Stover gruffly.